they couldn't spend the whole thing because they were failing so miserably, it was clear it wasn't going to happen. so they spent 132 million of it including to build two detroit-area factories, and now they've gone under. the chinese are swooping in and buying this company, and that $132 million of the stimulus money that was spent to build up whatever, whatever battery-making facilities and abilities they had, that's all going to go in the hands of the chinese? >> right. that's all, that's all going away, and as a nice added irony in all of this, what have money we borrowed from the bank of china to finance whatever part of the grant that was given to a123 batteries, we still have to pay that back. the taxpayers are still on the hook for baying back the deaf -- paying back the deficit-spending portion of that money even though it's now long, long gone. megyn: so we borrowed from china so that we could offer stimulus. we gave part of the stimulus to a123. a123 spent $100 million plus of the money, failed to succeed, and now that, those assets are going to china too. >> well, when you sa